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Ellen Vanengelen |
Cultural Stimuli in SF Issue 202: pinching flavor
If Friday night isn't enough of an excuse to knock one back, St. Patrick's Day encourages us all to have a cold one this week in the name of Irish pride. Or, if you're off the sauce, you can use the opportunity to pinch the hell out of someone you don't like so much — or, perhaps someone you do. Either way, take heart, because all this good cheer and green must mean that spring is right around the corner. For those feeling can't-wait ornery, you can unleash your inner punk with a round of live karaoke, or get in touch with your inner anarchist at the annual book fair. In other educational matters, you can really learn about the inner world of women with ex-porn star-cum-sex lecturer Annie Sprinkle. And if you're looking to give minorities some props, there's the Asian American Film Festival, a Black Panther show at Yerba Buena Center, and an exhibition on queer culture at the Cartoon Art Museum. But regardless of what you do, kiss everyone like they're Irish, and spread it...
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flavorpill SF is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.

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The VAIO® FJ Notebook is a sleek mobile companion. Weighing just 5.3 lbs, it's lightweight and slim with a generous 14.1" widescreen display packing Sony's XBRITE-ECO™ LCD technology. Powerful performance and a built-in DVD+R Double Layer/DVD+RW drive, camera, and microphone — plus Sony's original multimedia software — keep you connected and entertained when you're on the go. |
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Spotlight
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Freedom Fighters
Forty years ago, the Black Panther Party formed in Oakland to fight for the rights of minorities and the working class. In honor of the group's anniversary, Yerba Buena Center presents rare artifacts and never-before-released documents, photos, and recordings in a special exhibition.
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| Daily Updates |

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| READING |
William T. Vollmann: Uncentering the Earth: Copernicus and the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
| when: |
Tue 3.14 (7pm) |
| where: |
Booksmith (1644 Haight St, 415.863.8688) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Master wordsmith and inveterate degenerate William Vollmann returns to his old stomping grounds bearing a National Book Award for last year's sprawling WWII novel Europe Central. For the relentless Vollmann, a new year means a whole new book — this time it's an exploration of Copernicus' 16th-century astrological treatise The Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres. It can be almost uncomfortable to watch the bespectacled, slightly twitchy Vollmann read aloud, but no matter whether he brandishes a firearm, invites attendees to a beer afterward, or simply plays it as cool as he can, the enigmatic author always confirms his reputation as one of the most sensitive, idiosyncratic, and brilliant writers we have. (TW)
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| MUSIC: Klezmer Punk |
The Hub's Annual Purim Bash feat. Golem
| when: |
Tue 3.14 (8pm) |
| where: |
12 Galaxies (2565 Mission St, 415.970.9777) map |
| price: |
$12 |
| links: |
Event Info | Golem |
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Annette Ezekiel fell under the spell of Eastern European music when she witnessed a Ukrainian dance group perform in the Catskill Mountains of New York. She was so inspired that she founded Golem, a six-piece Yiddish rock outfit that blasts punk-infused klezmer ballads and barnstormers with reckless abandon. Tonight they celebrate the most festive of Jewish holidays with a healthy dose of raucous fun — don't be surprised if a hamantasch ends up in your martini. (SNS)
Who was the first golem in the traditional sense of the word? The first, second, and fifth correct responses each win an pair of tickets to this show.
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| ALSO ON TUE |
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SPECTACLE
Pi Day Tue 3.14 (1:59pm) Exploratorium (Palace of Fine Arts, 3601 Lyon St, 415.561.0399) map $13
Event Info |
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Pi: an infinite number representing the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter and, for the Exploratorium, an excuse to spend a day eating pizza, singing songs, and bowing down to the math gods. (JK)
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| PARTY |
Defenestration Launch Party
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No frills and all sass online literary journal Defenestration doesn't care much for Flash or high-concept web design. It's also charmingly random — it expound on the kind of things you'd chat with your friends or roommates about (popular culture, random strangers on BART, David Bowie, etc). The only consistent thread running through what it does is a sense of fun and irreverence, as tonight's celebration of its latest issue proves — poets and professors read from their work right alongside the burlesque of the cheerleading Cock-T's. (CT)
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| THEATRE |
On the Bum
| when: |
Now through Sat 3.18 (Thur-Sat: 8pm) |
| where: |
Zeum Theater at Yerba Buena Gardens (Howard & 4th Sts, 415.749.2228) map |
| price: |
$10-15 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Trying to find work as an actor has never been easy, but during the Great Depression, when actresses were considered akin to prostitutes, women looking to act not only had to deal with an incredibly scarce job market, but also the stigma that the profession carried with it. On the Bum centers on a small-town actress, Eleanor, who moves to NYC to "make it big" and finds herself going to another small town for a government-sponsored production. Hardships aren't left behind with the move as she uncovers political scandal, faces censorship, and finds romance in this original and witty play. (EF)
Note: There is a matinee on Sat 3.18 at 2pm.
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| MUSIC: Indie Rock |
Big Bend w/ Sprite Macon
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Renowned for its bluegrass nights, Amnesia delves into the local indie scene with this show. Headliners Big Bend relocate the swagger of Rid of Me-era PJ Harvey to the American Southwest, where an open twang replaces Beefheart-inspired claustrophobia. Opener Sprite Macon's MySpace profile lists influences such as David Bowie and T. Rex, but it's the inclusion of Blind Willie Johnson that's far more telling. Macon and her band add some flourishes to their spare folk — violin, cello, bass, and drums — but the singer is an anachronism, with a voice seemingly unearthed from beneath the scratches of a long-forgotten 78. (JK)
Note: Nathan Moomaw also opens.
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| DJ |
FC/Kahuna w/ Kerowack and Land Shark
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FC/Kahuna brothers Daniel Ormondroyd and Jon Nowell helped usher tech-disco house into the mainstream dance landscape with their 2002 album, Machine Says Yes. The disc combined juicy Mr. Oizo-esque bass lines with plenty of robot wonk and iced-down guest vocals courtesy of Super Furry Animal Gruff Rhys and Gusgus' Hafdis Huld. Laced with electroclash and big beat, their club stompers are sure bets to work the floor into a frenzied state. Equally surefire is tonight's opener, Kerowack, a local two-man team known for synthy live PAs and bad wigs. (AB)
Note: Ticket sales stop at 4pm on Thur 3.16.
Got a funny wig story? The three most hair-raising encounters in 50 words or less each win a pair of tickets to this event.
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| ART |
Black Panther Rank and File
| when: |
Fri 3.17 - Sun 7.2 (Tue & Wed, Fri-Sun: 12-5pm / Thur: 12-8pm) |
| where: |
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (701 Mission St, 415.978.2787) map |
| price: |
$6 |
| links: |
Event Info | Black Panthers |
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The Black Panthers, founded by Oakland resident Huey P. Newton, jolted American politics with the threat of revolution — the image of 1968 Olympic medalists Tommie Smith and John Carlos defiantly raising their fists remains iconic to this day. One of America's fiercest political movements celebrates its 40th anniversary with an exhibit of artifacts — documents, photographs, and film — that includes Panther-inspired artwork from the likes of Andy Warhol and Nick Cave. Many of the items on display have never been shown to the public before and give a rare glimpse into an organization that has left an indelible impression on the nation's psyche. (SNS)
Note: There is an opening party for this exhibition tonight (8pm, $12).
Which former Black Panther is still at large with a $1,000,000 bounty reward? The first and fourth correct responses each win a pair of tickets to the opening night party.
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| FILM |
Piece by Piece
| when: |
Fri 3.17 - Tue 3.21 (Fri-Tue: 7:15 & 9:15pm / Sat & Sun: 2, 4, 7:15 & 9:15pm) |
| where: |
Red Vic (1727 Haight St, 415.668.3994) map |
| price: |
$8 |
| links: |
Event Info | Piece by Piece |
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Films like Downtown 81, Basquiat, and Graffiti Verite have ensured that New York and Los Angeles graffiti artists get their due but, thus far, the equally vibrant San Francisco scene has gone undocumented. Sensing this void, local filmmaker Nic Hill assembled Piece by Piece, which compares the efforts of local artists to those of their comrades elsewhere. What emerges is a portrait of a creative, influential, and controversial movement, as the line between radical art and illegal act gets discussed by the different citizens of San Francisco: graffiti artists, police officers, and the average person on the street. (JK)
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| FILM |
Gadabout Film Festival
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Held together by a passionately independent spirit — and thus lacking substantial funding — the short films of the touring Gadabout Film Festival stop over in San Francisco. Idiosyncratic genres and subjects abound, including vampiric music videos, anarchist manifestos, and quirky animations. Particularly strong is Christopher Conforti's animated Frog, which finds an unlucky amphibian constantly butting heads with excitable humans and an angry cat. Things get a bit more serious with festival circuit favorite This Is for Betsy Hall, documentary filmmaker Hope Hall's ode to her mother, a lifelong sufferer of bulimia and anorexia. (JK)
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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MUSIC: Punk Rock
St. Patrick's Day Blowout feat. Punk Rock Karaoke Fri 3.17 (6pm) Elbo Room (647 Valencia St, 415.552.7788) map $7
Event Info |
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Celebrate St. Patty's Day by slurring through "Teenage Kicks" and "A Pair of Brown Eyes" in front of a crowd so full of stout and whiskey it'll cheer along to your every burp and snarl. (JG)
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MUSIC: Indie Rock
From Monument to Masses w/ Whysall Lane, Love Like Fire, and Mike Park Fri 3.17 (9pm) Café Du Nord (2170 Market St, 415.861.5016) map $10
Event Info |
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FMTM's hazy, meandering songs are full of post-rock guitar noodlings, sporadic polyrhythmic elements, and the occasional political revolutionary's soundbite. (CH)
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| FAIR |
The 11th Annual San Francisco Anarchist Book Fair
| when: |
Sat 3.18 (10am-6pm) |
| where: |
County Fair Building (Golden Gate Park, 9th Ave & Lincoln St, 415.753.7090) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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Good luck finding a parking spot for your bike in Golden Gate Park today. Exhibitors at the 11th annual Anarchist Bookfair include pedal-happy groups like the San Francisco Bike Messengers Association and Earth First, as well as more recognized names in publishing. City Lights, Bitch magazine, Maximum Rocknroll, Slingshot, and Project Censored have tables alongside a slew of zines and small presses. Local writers speak throughout the afternoon; readings by queer activist author Michelle Tea and Beat grande dame Diane di Prima might get even anarchists to wait in line. (KE)
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| POETRY |
10th Annual Youth Speaks Teen Poetry Slam, Grand Slam Finals
| when: |
Sat 3.18 (7pm) |
| where: |
War Memorial Opera House (301 Van Ness Ave, 415.552.8338) map |
| price: |
$15 |
| links: |
Event Info (pdf) |
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It's a given that most teen poetry is horrendous. So how does the San Francisco-based national writing program, Youth Speaks, beat the odds year after year, bringing out the clear-eyed, powerful voices of teenage poets and shedding all traces of the clichéd angst you remember from your high school diary? Make an attempt to unravel that mystery as the best of the best young performers in the Bay duke it out for the championship title this weekend. (HMT)
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| PERFORMANCE |
International Clitoris Day Celebration feat. Annie Sprinkle
| when: |
Sat 3.18 (8pm) |
| where: |
Julia Morgan Center for the Arts (2640 College Ave, Berkeley, 925.798.1300) map |
| price: |
$25-45 |
| links: |
Event Info | Annie Sprinkle |
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Former porn star and accomplished lecturer Dr. Annie Sprinkle (yeah, that's an actual PhD she's got) continues her brilliant career of tearing down misconceptions about sex and feminism. In celebration of International Clitoris Day, Sprinkle performs her infamous "Public Cervix Announcement" for the first time in ten years. With the aid of a speculum, she gives individual audience members the opportunity to explore the elusive and complex landscape of the female reproductive organs up close and very, very personal. The night also features Sia Amma's performance piece, "Clitoris Celebration, Think Outside the Box." (JG)
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| MUSIC: Bayou Funk |
Robert Walter's Super Heavy Organ
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San Diego native Robert Walter fled his new home in New Orleans after Katrina last summer. Two days after the storm, Walter's latest offering, Super Heavy Organ, hit the shelves. The record weaves tales of the Big Easy through viscous organ tones and soothing jazz waltzes. Walter, keyboardist for the critically acclaimed Greyboy Allstars, plays a massive Hammond B3 organ, a perfect instrument to convey the somber mood of post-Katrina New Orleans. However, Walter's bayou funk is anything but a downer and is a proper tribute to the joyful tunes of NOLA. (SNS)
Which instrument's creation was heavily influenced by the sound of the Hammond B3? The first correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| MUSIC: Disco Noise |
Numbers w/ Fuckwolf and Moe! Staiano
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Satisfied with neither the condescending Gang of Four-isms of "dance punk" nor the noise scene's general eschewing of song structure, Numbers and Fuckwolf opt for a healthy mixture of both genres. Having dropped their earlier synth-punk leanings in favor of more expansive arrangements, Numbers still get plenty of mileage out of jagged, sawtooth bass lines, scratchy guitar stabs, and deadpan vocals, but the group's influences (early XTC, Devo) now act as counterpoint rather than crib notes. Fuckwolf also hotrod rock, tricking out their songs with dub effects, double-time fills, and interjections of noise. Experimental percussionist Moe! Staino opens. (MS)
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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FILM
Down and Dirty: The Intimate World of Queer Filmmaking Sat 3.18 (8pm) Femina Potens Gallery (465 S. Van Ness Ave, 415.217.9340) map $5
Event Info |
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Join trans artist/director/rock star Shawna Virago and activist Shani Heckman as they discuss their work at Femina Potens' new screening and discussion series featuring local queer filmmakers. (MS)
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| DISCUSSION |
Lawrence Weschler and Walter Murch: Everything That Rises: A Book of Convergences
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Despite their different media, journalist and regular Harper's contributor Lawrence Weschler and famed film/sound editor Walter Murch (Apocalypse Now) have both built their careers around creating connections, whether by connecting disparate cultural and historical events or by synchronizing image and sound. The two discuss the powerful and often unexpected juxtapositions and confluences encountered in culture, as detailed in Wechler's latest essay collection Everything That Rises: A Book of Convergences. (MS)
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| ALSO ON SUN |
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FILM
Rap Dreams Sun 3.19 (2 & 5pm) The Parkway Theatre (1834 Park Blvd, Oakland, 510.814.2400) map $5
Event Info |
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Kevin Epps delves into the hardscrabble lives of Bay Area rappers and their big-blingin' dreams in his latest documentary, which follows the budding careers of Mistah FAB, Hectic, and Kev Kelley. Epps speaks at tonight's screening. (LH)
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| MUSIC: Punk Rock |
Art Brut
| when: |
Mon 3.20 (9pm) |
| where: |
Bottom of the Hill (1233 17th St, 415.621.4455) map |
| price: |
$12 |
| links: |
Event Info | Art Brut |
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Art Brut make deceptively sophomoric punk rock. Frontman Eddie Argos' funny, un-ironic one-liners and allusions are delightfully cheeky ("Haven't read the NME in so long / Don't know what genre we belong"), while riffs that even your little brother can play are headbang-inducing all around. Anthems like "Formed a Band" and "Emily Kane" (off the guerilla debut Bang Bang Rock and Roll) might have them pegged in some circles as the next Strokes, but Art Brut are hardly mop-topped bourgeois shoegazers. Stalking the stage like Jarvis Cocker alternately channeling Jonathan Richman and Mark E. Smith, Argos' lack of pretension and wink-wink, nudge-nudge candor is as charming as it is unique — and always a whole lot of fun. (JMS)
Note: Gil Mantera's Party Dream and Crystal Skulls open.
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| FILM |
24th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival
| when: |
Thur 3.16 - Sun 3.26 (schedule) |
| where: |
Various locations |
| price: |
Various |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Perched on the Pacific Rim and home to a diverse population of progressive, creative Asian Americans, San Francisco is the ideal locale for a festival celebrating their work. Now in its 24th year, this spring's festival boasts 126 films shown across the Bay Area. Screenings include the San Francisco premiere of Deepa Mehta's Water (the final installment of her controversial Elemental Trilogy), Only the Brave, a drama following the Japanese-American 100th battalion during World War II, and a host of other documentaries, dramas, comedies, and shorts by and about Asians and Asian Americans. (CH)
The 100th battalion was given what nickname after earning over 3,900 individual decorations? The first and second correct responses each win a pair of tickets to a screening of either The Crimson Kimono or Bridge to the Sun.
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| THEATRE |
Morbidity and Mortality
| when: |
Now through Sun 4.9 (schedule) |
| where: |
Magic Theatre (Fort Mason Center, Bldg D, 3rd Fl, 415.437.6775) map |
| price: |
$20-50 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Courtney Baron's Morbidity and Mortality occupies no specific space or time. Three actors speak (mostly to the audience, but occasionally to each other) about the complications that follow the death of a newborn baby. After this tragedy, Carolyn Goldenhersch (Sasha Eden), a married Jewish Manhattanite, turns away from her husband Michael (Jonathan Leveck) and to the Indian-American doctor (Hari Dhillon) who operated unsuccessfully on her baby. In this Magic Theatre production (the second play in its Hot House 2006 series), Baron's words echo through a bare set, leaving the fluctuating emotions her dialogue elicits to come up and fill the void. (JK)
Which cheerful government agency publishes a weekly Morbidity and Mortality report? The first, second, and third correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this play.
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| ART |
No Straight Lines: Queer Culture and the Comics
| when: |
Sat 3.18 - Sun 6.25 (Tue-Sun: 11am-5pm) |
| where: |
Cartoon Art Museum (655 Mission St, 415.227.8666) map |
| price: |
$6 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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While Dykes to Watch Out For sounds like a panic-mongering Jerry Falwell leaflet, Alison Bechdel's 23-year-old comic book is spectacularly flippant, wry, insightful, and poignant. Following the lives of an ensemble of very witty and very real lesbian, gay, straight, trans, and questioning characters, Bechdel chronicles the trials of parenthood, moving to the (white, hetero) suburbs, and selecting appropriate drag king facial hair. Bechdel is featured alongside twenty other notable queer comic artists including Diane DiMassa (Hothead Paisan) and Robert Kirby (Curbside) at the Cartoon Art Museum's new exhibit, which celebrates both classic and new queer-centric titles. (CH)
Dykes to Watch Out For has been translated into Lepakkoelämää in Finnish. What does this mean literally? The first two correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this exhibition.
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INVASION OF THE POD PEOPLE: Podbop |
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Convincing yourself to check out a random five-dollar indie show is easy enough. Persuading your friends to go along for the ride is a bit trickier, but your sell just got a little easier. Podbop is a cleverly designed website that tracks the shows coming to your town and gathers MP3s from band websites into compact little podcasts for your listening pleasure. Songs from indie-electro outfit Metric, classic punkers the Subhumans, and many more are queued up and ready for you to inflict on your friends. (CH)
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CD REVIEW: Grand National, Kicking the National Habit |
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Recall
Released March 2006
$14.98 (Amazon)
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Early output from Grand National was something stateside fans had to fight
to get their hands on. After piquing interest with the inclusion of the
jagged, dance floor-friendly pop "Playing In The Distance" on the
Output
Recordings Channel 3 compilation, the band then released a vinyl-only
EP
on British dance label Sunday Best. Unless actively sought out, most
listeners were kept out of the loop, but thankfully, the domestic release
of
Kicking the National Habit sees all of this early material included
— and it's worth the wait. The London-based duo has a refined ear for melancholic pop, blending electronic elements with tasteful, Police-influenced ska rhythms. This is best heard on "Peanut Dreams" and, notably,
"Drink to Moving On," an amber-hued, dreamy ode to loss that's arguably
Lawrence Rudd's finest vocal performance on the album. (CJN)
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STREAM: Carlos D. and VHS OR BETA Live at the Guggenheim |
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VHS OR BETA's Mark Palgy and Craig Pfunder and Interpol's own celeb DJ Carlos D. enticed New York's below-14th-Street set to the Guggenheim on March 3rd for the most recent installment of the museum's First Fridays events — featuring music curated by Flavorpill. In the bleach-white rotunda, Kentucky boys Palgy and Pfunder tag-teamed disco beats and threw down some old-school hip-hop, and energy levels only rose when downtown don Carlos D. took to the decks. Cueing Death from Above 1979's "Romantic Rights," D. deployed a guided missile that positively ignited the dance floor. Views from the museum's upper reaches of the swarming and bouncing partygoers below were as surreal as David Smith's metal sculptures peppering the space. Though we can't turn back the clock, you can tune into AOL Music's exclusive stream and relive the night in crystal-clear audio. (MC)
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| Header Design: |
| Snot | Ellen Vanengelen |
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| Editors: |
| Sea green | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Lime | Lisa Hix | | Verdigris | Connie Hwong | | Chromium oxide | Jonathan Knapp | | Puke | Jake Lancaster | | British racing green | Doug Levy | | DayGlo green | Sascha Lewis | | Dysentery | Gerry Mak | | Seaweed | Mark Mangan | | Pine | Colin J. Nagy | | Mint | Jonathan Schultz | | Pus | Claire Smith | | Gangrene | Matt Sussman | | Shamrock | Leah M. Taylor | | Absinthe | Toby Warner |
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| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill SF is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in San Francisco. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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| FEEDBACK |
| As always, feel free to send in any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
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| EVENT & DESIGN SUBMISSIONS |
To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design. |
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| Contributors: |
| Jolly Rancher Apple | Anna Balkrishna | | Scheele's green | Melody Caraballo | | Brunswick green | Erika Christiansen | | Moss | Kjersti Egerdahl | | Peridot | Kellie A. Ell | | Forest green | Lauren Epstein | | Pewter | Ellisa Feinstein | | Irgazine green | Josh C. Forbes | | Teal | Joyce L. Guan | | Screamin' green | Jennie Gruber | | Grass green | Annie Lo | | Kelly green | Tim Pratt | | Ultra green | Sam N. Shah | | Asparagus | Jennifer M. Stais | | Olive | Hallie Montoya Tansey | | Emerald | Cheryl Taruc |
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Production: |
| Viridian | Casey Acierno | | Cobalt | Anjuli Ayer | | Pastel | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Alchemical green | Chelsea Bauch | | Mold | Nate Bock | | Paris green | Morgan Croney | | Malachite synthetic | Dan Gendelman | | Ultramarine | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Cadmium green | David Morrow | | Phthalocyanine green | Judah Wiedre |
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